Yvette Cooper: Corbyn's 'not a team player'

“How will you unite the Labour party if you push Jeremy and his supporters away?” he asks her.

She says she’s not going to start ‘drawing up shadow cabinets’.

She adds Jeremy’s ‘not wanted to be a team player in the past having voted against the party 500 times in the past’.

20:26

Is time right for a woman leader?

Andy Burnham is asked about his comment that Labour could have a female leader ‘when the time is right’.

“I also said the time could be now,” he retorts.

20:25KEY EVENT

Jeremy Corbyn invites Liz Kendall to work with him

Now it’s time for the candidates to question each other.

Jeremy Corbyn asks Liz Kendall: “Could we work together after the election?

“I work with everybody, I’m a very inclusive sort of chap!”

She replies: “I would work with whoever is elected in this contest because I believe this party is the best champion of equality and prosperity there’s ever been.

“I don’t agree with the policies Jeremy has put forward. The fundamentals of this don’t change.”

Jeremy says: “So that’s a maybe is it?”

He adds he’d work with Liz Kendall.

20:22

Corbyn backs faith schools - with one catch

Yvette Cooper says too much is centralised to the government - while Liz Kendall says ‘we’ve got to get away from this obsession with structures’.

Ms Kendall says there needs to be ‘flexibility in the curriculum to really grasp what inspires kids and hooks them in’.

Employers should be allowed to see vocational and academic courses as being just as good as each other, and there should be major reforms of the curriculum - especially aged 15 to 19.

Jeremy Corbyn says faith schools are ‘absolutely part of the landscape’ but Catholic schools should teach Islam and Islamic schools should teach Christianity.

“Indeed, many of them do this,” he adds.

“I don’t want all of our communities to grow up in silos because we know where that leads in the end,” he says.

20:18

QUESTION 8: Should we back faith schools?

Vicar Mark Lynden-Smith asks how important faith schools are for the future of Britain.

Andy Burnham says his children go to a Catholic comprehensive and ‘that’s me, that’s part of my background’.

He adds: “I hate this system where we break it down into faith schools and academies that aren’t accountable”.

There are huge whoops as he lambasts Michael Gove for doing more to hurt the education system than any previous Education Secretary.

20:16

Host heckled by the audience

An audience member turns on Sky News host Adam Boulton for quoting the Sun newspaper at Jeremy Corbyn.

“We came here to see the candidates and you’re only asking him [Corbyn], says the angry man.

“There are three of them!”

20:14

Jeremy Corbyn quizzed on video for Communist Party

Host Adam Boulton quizzes Corbyn on remarks quoted in today’s Sun, in which he hinted the Army should be hugely scaled down.

“I don’t know what the remarks are because I don’t buy the Sun newspaper,” he snorts.

They’re explained to him, and he says we should be ‘more interested in supporting international law, working with the UN’ than holding up membership of Nato.

20:09

Andy Burnham says Labour is still haunted by Iraq's shadow

The publication of the Chilcot report on the Iraq War ‘will be a sobering moment for this party,’ says Andy Burnham.

“Ed Miliband was right to oppose military action in Syria in the summer of 2013.

“I think we have to have in our mind all the time that we need to proceed with caution and heed the lessons of the last decade.”

20:06

QUESTION 6: Should Britain put boots on the ground to hit ISIS?

No, says Liz Kendall.

“My view is that any proposal should be taken seriously but we would have to be clear about what UK troops would add over and above what the US is doing and it would have to be part of a much broader political strategy in the region.”

Who are ISIL selling their oil to, she asks.

No, says Andy Burnham.

“This has to be thought through. There has to be time for careful consideration.”

If ISIS is removed in Syria, what fills the vacuum?

No, says Jeremy Corbyn.

He hits out at the government for trialling secret bombing in Syria despite MPs voting against military action in the country.

“I think what we have to do is mount a serious political initiative across the entire region.”

“I think we shouldn’t have UK troops on the ground. I don’t think that’s the right approach.”

“ISIL is a barbaric and totalitarian movement,” she says - but British troops in Syria are not the way.

It’s ‘got to be led by the region itself’.

19:59KEY EVENT

Andy Burnham could legalise medicinal cannabis

“There is a case for it in that people who suffer from conditions like Multiple Sclerosis... the medicinal benefits are enormous,” says Andy Burnham

“But it would have to be highly regulated” - and that’s where the problems come in.

But he wouldn’t be averse to looking at it.

Yvette Cooper says all drugs should ‘go through the normal processes just like any kind of drug’. If it helps patients, it should be allowed.

But Liz Kendall says ‘many doctors are concerned about the problems particularly for young people and the risk of psychosis’.

She does add though that ‘there should be proper trials because many people do feel strongly that it makes a difference’.

Jeremy Corbyn is much more direct.

“It’s obviously very beneficial to people... and I think we should be adult and grown up as a society and decriminalise,” he says.

“We should look at drugs policy as a whole.”

He then clarifies he wouldn’t legalise recreational cannabis now but would look at it, and says medicinal cannabis should be legalised.

19:54Jack Blanchard

Meanwhile... Cameron plans to take 4,000 Syrians

Just before the Labour candidates started slugging it out, it emerged David Cameron has agreed to take thousands of refugees from camps on the Syrian border.

Downing Street sources told the Mirror an announcement will be made “in the next day or two” that could see Britain accept several thousand refugees from camps on the Syrian border. Although there was no exact figure from No 10 it is thought the UK could take as many as 4,000 more people. It follows widespread anger at the PM’s heartless refusal to accept Britain’s fair share of refugees from the war-ravaged nation.

Corbyn wants to give power from MPs to members

The party membership is at a high, says Jeremy Corbyn - let’s use that to our advantage.

“We have top down decision making and top down policy making. I want to reverse that.

“You’d start with the strength and intelligence and enthusiasm of the activists in the party.

“We’ve got people who have great ideas. Let’s hear them”.

Liz Kendall says she’d love that too - but ‘let’s get real’.

“The Tories want to wipe us out and they’ll throw everything at us as soon as a leader is elected”.

They’re going to ‘whip up English nationalism aided and abetted by the SNP’, attack trade unions and disenfranchise 2 million people with individual voter registration - which they’re bringing forward a year earlier than they were recommended to by experts.